Expression of functional melanocortin-4 receptor in the hypothalamic GT1-1 cell line.
Khong. K K; Kurtz. S E SE; Sykes. R L RL; Cone. R D RD
Key Findings
- GT1-1 hypothalamic cells express functional MC4‑R
- NDP‑α‑MSH binds MC4‑R with high affinity and raises cAMP (EC50 ≈ 2.2 × 10⁻⁸ M)
- NDP‑α‑MSH stimulates GnRH release, which is blocked by AGRP
Practical Outcomes
- Melanotan‑I can activate MC4‑R in brain cells, suggesting it might affect hunger signals and GnRH‑driven hormone release. However, the data are from a cell line, so real‑world dosing or benefits for humans are still unknown and should be approached cautiously.
Summary
This study shows that a specific brain cell line (GT1-1) naturally makes the MC4‑R receptor, which reacts to the melanotan‑I peptide (NDP‑α‑MSH). When the peptide binds, the cells raise cAMP levels and release the hormone GnRH, an effect that can be blocked by the natural antagonist AGRP. The work is a basic lab finding, not a human trial, but it confirms that melanotan‑I can directly activate MC4‑R in hypothalamic cells and may influence appetite‑related and reproductive pathways.
Abstract
Mutations in the melanocortin-4 receptor (MC4-R) cause obesity in both mice and humans, and the receptor is presumed to have an important role in the regulation of energy homeostasis. The MC4-R is expressed in discrete sets of neurons in the central nervous system, and thus it has been technically difficult to study the regulation of expression and the signaling mechanisms of this receptor. We report here a neuronal cell line that exhibits endogenous functional expression for the MC4-R. Initially, RT-PCR analysis showed the presence of MC4-R RNA in the hypothalamic GT1-1 and GT1-7 cells. In addition, GT1-7 cells expressed melanocortin-3 receptor while the GT1-1 subclone specifically expressed predominantly the MC4-R RNA. High-affinity binding sites were demonstrated in the GT1-1 and GT1-7 cells for NDP-alpha melanocyte-stimulating hormone (MSH; K(i) = 1.1 x 10(-10) and 1.8 x 10(-10) M) and agouti-related protein (AGRP; K(i) = 1.548 x 10(-9) and 1.663(-9) M). alpha-MSH-stimulated cAMP production in GT1-1 cells with an EC(50) of 2.2 x 10(-8) M, and cAMP production was inhibited in the presence of AGRP, an endogenous antagonist of the MC4-R. Stimulation of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) secretion was achieved with 1 nM to 1 microM concentrations of NDP-alpha-MSH while no GnRH secretion was observed when the GT1-1 cells were treated with AGRP. The data presented here show that GT1-1 cells specifically express a functional MC4-R that couples to GnRH release.
Study Information
pubmed
2001
2001-08-30T00:00:00.000Z
10.1159/000054686
59
32